Models for Linking/Integrating Behavioral Health & Primary Care

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Models for Integrating
Behavioral Health & Primary Care
David A. Pollack, M.D.
Professor for Public Policy
Oregon Health and Science
University
Why Integrate BH & PC?
BH disorder burden is great.
 BH and physical health problems are
interwoven.
 Treatment gap for BH conditions is
enormous.
 PC settings for BH services enhance
access.
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Why Integrate BH & PC?
BH services in PC settings reduces
stigma and discrimination.
 Treating common BH conditions in
PC settings is cost-effective.
 Most people with BH conditions
treated in collaborative PC have
good outcomes.
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Barriers to Integration
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BH & PC providers operate in separate
silos
Information sharing rare & difficult
Economic crises lead to budget cutbacks;
inertia mitigates against system reform.
Workforce capacity and competency
limitations
Financial (revenue/billing) impediments
Lack of parity for BH
Models for Integration
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Critical concepts:
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Patient-centered Primary Care Home
Health Care Team
Stepped Care
Care Model: redesign of care system for
improved quality (How to organize these
functions)
Four Quadrant Clinical Integration Model:
population/severity focused tool for identifying
locus and intensity of care (Who does what,
with whom, and where)
Patient-centered Primary
Care Home
Access To Care
 Accountability
 Comprehensive Whole Person
Care
 Continuity
 Coordination And Integration
 Person And Family Centered
Care
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Health Care Team
Doctor-patient relationship replaced
with team-patient relationship
 Team members share responsibility
for patient care
 Role definition and interoperability
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Stepped Care Principles
Least disruptive
 Least extensive for positive results
 Least intensive for positive results
 Least expensive for positive results
 Least expensive in terms of staff
training required to obtain results
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Stepped Care Levels
1.
2.
3.
4.
Basic education: info sharing &
referral to self-help resources
Clinicians provide psychoeducational & motivational support
BH specialists use specific practice
algorithms
Referral to external specialty or
higher level BH providers
Care Model
Good outcomes result of productive
interactions btw/ informed,
activated pt/family and prepared,
proactive practice team
 Model developed by Wagner, et al,
at Improving Chronic Illness Care
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Care Model
Community
Health System
Health Care Organization
Resources and
Policies
SelfManagement
Support
Informed,
Activated
Patient/family
Delivery
System
Design
Productive
Interactions
Decision
Support
Clinical
Information
Systems
Prepared,
Proactive,
Multidisciplinary
Practice Team
Improved Outcomes
Self-Management Support
Emphasize the patient's central
role
 Use effective self-management
support strategies
 Organize resources to provide
support
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Delivery System Design
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Define roles and distribute tasks
amongst team members
Use planned interactions to support
evidence-based care
Provide clinical case management
services
Ensure regular follow-up
Give care that patients understand and
that fits their culture
Decision Support
Embed evidence-based guidelines
into daily clinical practice
 Integrate specialist expertise and
primary care
 Use proven provider education
methods
 Share guidelines and information
with patients
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Clinical Information
System
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Provide reminders for providers and
patients
Identify relevant patient subpopulations
for proactive care
Facilitate individual patient care
planning
Share information with providers and
patients
Monitor performance of team and
system
Health Care Organization
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Visibly support improvement at all
levels, starting with senior leaders
Promote effective improvement
strategies aimed at comprehensive
system change
Encourage open and systematic
handling of problems
Provide incentives based on quality of
care
Develop agreements for care
coordination
Community
Resources/Policies
Encourage patients to participate
in effective programs
 Form partnerships with community
organizations to support or
develop programs
 Advocate for policies to improve
care
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The Four Quadrant Model
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Addresses the needs of the population and
appropriate targeting of services
Organizes our understanding of the potential
approaches—there is no single method of
integration
Clarifies the respective roles and locus of PCP and
BH providers, depending on levels of severity and
co-morbidity
Identifies system tools and clinician skill and
knowledge sets needed and how they vary by
subpopulation
Developed by National Council for Community
Behavioral Healthcare
Quadrant I
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Low BH/low physical health
complexity and risk
BH services in primary care
BH staff on site
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Consultant to PCPs
Assessment and triage
Brief services
Referral to specialty BH
Referral to community
resources
BH staff competent in both
MH and SA
Quadrant II
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High BH/low physical health
complexity and risk
BH services in PC & specialty
BH settings
BH/PC care manager assures
access to primary care
BH/PC care manager
coordinates with PCP via
established protocol
BH staff competent in both
MH and SA
Quadrant III
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Low BH/high physical health
complexity and risk
Served in primary/specialty
healthcare system w/ BH staff on
site
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Consultant to PCPs
Assessment and triage
Brief services
Referral to specialty BH
Referral to community resources
BH clinician as physician
extender & health educator re:
chronic health conditions
BH staff competent in both MH
and SA
Quadrant IV
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High BH/high physical health
complexity and risk
Served in both specialty BH
and primary care/specialty
settings w/ appropriate
coordination
BH care manager works w/
other healthcare providers,
esp. disease management
care managers to assure
coordination via established
evidence-based protocols
BH staff competent in both
MH and SA
Levels of Integration
Minimal
Basic
Basic
Close
Close
at a
On-site Partly
Fully
Distance
Integrated Integrated
--------- Collaboration Continuum ---------
Model 1: Improving Collaboration btw/
Separate Providers
Minimal
 BH & PC providers work in separate
facilities, have separate systems,
and communicate sporadically
 Private practices; settings w/ active
referral linkages
 Q 1 & 3 (Low BH needs)
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Model 2: Medical Provided BH Care
Basic at a distance
 Providers in separate systems at
separate sites, but engage in
periodic communication about
shared patients
 Private practices; settings w/ active
referral linkages
 Q 1 & 3 (Low BH needs)
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Model 3: Co-location
Basic on-site
 Providers have separate systems but
share same facility, allowing for
more communication
 HMO settings; PC clinics that employ
therapists or care managers
 Q 1, 2, & 3
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Model 4: Disease Management
Close, partly integrated
 Share same facility, have some
systems in common, e.g.,
scheduling or records; physical
proximity allows for regular face-toface communication
 HMO settings; PC clinics that employ
therapists or care managers
 Q 1, 2, & 3
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Model 5: Reverse Co-location
Close, partly integrated
 Share same facility, have some
systems in common, e.g.,
scheduling or records; physical
proximity allows for regular face-toface communication
 HMO settings; PC clinics that employ
therapists or care managers
 Q 2 & 4 (High BH needs)
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Model 6: Unified PC & BH
Close, fully integrated
 BH & PC providers part of same
team
 Large practices and medical systems
 Q 1-4
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Model 7: Primary Care Behavioral
Health
Close, fully integrated
 BH & PC providers part of same
team
 Large practices and medical systems
 Q 1-4
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Model 8: Collaborative System of Care
Close, partly or fully integrated
 Specialty BH services integrated w/
PC services; may be partly or fully
integrated depending on degree of
collaboration
 HMO settings; PC clinics that employ
therapists or care managers
 Q 2 & 4 (High BH needs)
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Implementation Tasks
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Complete environmental scan
Determine program’s capacity and
“filters”
Establish administrative and clinical
leadership “buy-in”
Decide whether to rent or own BH staff
Determine staffing pattern and BH tasks
Define BH specialist skills
Clinical Tasks
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Triage
Comprehensive assessment
On-site treatment
Referral
Consultation
Care monitoring & condition management
The key is balanced
management of these tasks!
Staffing the Model
Behavioral health professional
(Masters or higher)
 Psychiatric provider (for diagnostic
and tx insights, not just for meds)
 Non-BH personnel trained to provide
specific support functions
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Clinician Characteristics
Comfortable with primary care
pace and treatment culture
 Respectful of cultural differences
 Bi-lingual language skills
 Flexible and adaptable
 Experience working in the public
sector
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Clinician Skills
Adept with SPMI and addiction
treatment issues
 Able to provide brief, creative, and
effective treatment
 Evidence-based treatment experience
 Prevention & patient education skills
 Experience w/ triage, crisis
interventions, & commitment process
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Skills: continued
Knowledge of Biopsychosocial and
Care Models
 Curious & interested in medication
and medical illness, labs etc.
 Computer competent and able to
document clinical activities succinctly
 Understands the impact of stigma on
client and providers
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Resources
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Chronic Care Model:
www.improvingchroniccare.org
NASMHPD Medical Directors Technical Report on
BH-PC Integration:
www.nasmhpd.org/general_files/publications/me
d_directors_pubs/Final%20Technical%20Report
%20on%20Primary%20Care%20%20Behavioral%20Health%20Integration.final.p
df
Resources
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EPC Effectiveness Report on Integration of BH &
Primary Care:
http://www.ahrq.gov/downloads/pub/evidence/p
df/mhsapc/mhsapc.pdf
NASMHPD Medical Directors Technical Report on
Excess Mortality for Persons with SPMI:
http://www.nasmhpd.org/general_files/publicati
ons/med_directors_pubs/NASMHPD%20Medical
%20Directors%20Health%20Indicators%20Repo
rt%2011-19-08.pdf
Resources
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Evolving Models of BH Integration in PC:
http://www.milbank.org/reports/10430EvolvingC
are/10430EvolvingCare.html
BH-PC Integration & the Person-centered
Healthcare Home:
http://www.allhealth.org/BriefingMaterials/Beha
vioralHealthandPrimaryCareIntegrationandthePer
son-CenteredHealthcareHome-1547.pdf
Psychiatrists and
Integrated Care
What roles can/should we play in
these programs?
 How can we get/provide training &
support?
 Is there a need for a caucus for
psychiatrists involved in
integrated/collaborative care?
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